In tonight’s show, author Wendell Potter joins Thom on set to discuss the the King vs. Burwell arguments and their impact on the Affordable Care Act.

In the Big Picture Rumble, Andrew Kloster of the Heritage Foundation, David Anderson of the Empowerment Radio Network, and Sean Noble of American Encore join Thom on set to the future of healthcare in America, the GOP’s non-Obamacare alternative, the Keystone XL veto, student loan debt protests, and right-to-work…for less laws.

Author and contributing editor at Newsweek Eleanor Clift talks DHS funding bill and what to expect the rest of the way from the 114th Republican controlled congress.

Thom gives his Daily Take- Right-To-Work for Less Crushes the Middle Class - plus The Good The Bad and The Very Very Ugly.

Hughey Newsome, Project 21 / Move-On-Up & Mike Malloy, The Mike Malloy Show & Jennifer Kerns, Washington Times / The Blaze joins Thom Hartmann. According to the American Public Health Association - almost 9,800 people could die if the Supreme Court sides with the plaintiffs in King v. Burwell and strikes down Obamacare subsidies

Hughey Newsome, Project 21 / Move-On-Up & Mike Malloy, The Mike Malloy Show & Jennifer Kerns, Washington Times / The Blaze joins Thom Hartmann. 13 years ago Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu said that invading Iraq would result in long-lasting peace in the Middle East. So why is anybody listening to what he has to say about Iran?

Congressman Mark Pocan (D-WI, 2nd district) joins Thom Hartmann. Scott Walker's war on unions keeps on chugging along as Wisconsin looks poised to become the nation's 25 right to work for less state. How did an historically progressive state like Wisconsin become ground zero for right-wing union-busting?

One of the really weird ironies of politics these days is the huge divergence between what the American people actually want and what the radical right-wingers in Washington actually do. You won’t hear this on Fox So-Called News, but right now the American people are as progressive as they ever have been.